Home /India /Kolkata
#3 Best Neighborhood in Kolkata

Ballygunge

Kolkata's elegant south

About the neighborhood

Neighbourhood in Kolkata, West Bengal, India

Ballygunge is a locality of South Kolkata in Kolkata district in the Indian state of West Bengal. It is one of the city's most affluent neighbourhoods.

History

The East India Company obtained from the Mughal emperor Farrukhsiyar, in 1717, the right to rent from 38 villages surrounding their settlement. Of these 5 lay across the Hooghly in what is now Howrah district. The remaining 33 villages were on the Calcutta side. After the fall of Siraj-ud-daulah, the last independent Nawab of Bengal, it purchased these villages in 1758 from Mir Jafar, and reorganised them. These villages were known en-bloc as Dihi Panchannagram and Ballygunge was one of them. It was considered to be a suburb beyond the limits of the Maratha Ditch. Beltala was a village in Dihi Mohanpur (later Monoharpukur).

Ballygunge grew up around a market for sand (bali in Bengali) and had garden-houses of 18th century Europeans. Amongst the prominent residents were George Mandeville, the zamindar/ collector, and Colonel Gilbert Ironside, a friend of Warren Hastings. In 1840, Emily Eden called Ballygunge 'our Eltham or Lewisham'. It also emerged as a citadel of the educated Bengali middle class after the suburban railway opened up the area.

In 1888, Ballygunge and Tollygunge had a combined thana (police station).

Entally, Manicktala, Beliaghata, Ultadanga, Chitpur, Cossipore, parts of Beniapukur, Ballygunge, Watgunge and Ekbalpur, and parts of Garden Reach and Tollygunge were added to Kolkata Municipal Corporation in 1888. Garden Reach was later taken out.

When the Bengal Renaissance started taking roots in 19th century Calcutta, it was initially limited to the predominantly Hindu 'Indian town' stretching north and north-east from the fringes of Burrabazar, with a somewhat later extension south and south-east of the 'European town' to Bhowanipore, and some decades later to Ballygunge, which was then developing as a suburb.

In the first half of the 20th century, "in the milieu of relative urban prosperity... Calcutta's rich citizens – those connected with jute, coal, tea, other industries, trade, money-lending and rentier income from urban property – did fabulously well for themselves." Large chunks of Ballygunge, Sunny Park, Rainey Park and Southern Avenue were developed during the 1930s and 1940s. Many of the mansions in Ballygunge, Bhowanipore and Alipore were built by the city's Bengali and new Marwari elite who wanted to move from the "dirtier sections of north Calcutta to the more fashionable areas in the south".

Geography

260m 283ydsBallygunge Location

Ballygunge is flanked by Park Circus in the north, Kasba and the Eastern Railway south suburban line in the east, Dhakuria and the Lakes (now called Rabindra Sarobar) in the south, and the localities of Bhowanipore and Lansdowne in the west. It is served by Ballygunge Junction railway station.

Police districts

The following police stations in the Ballygunge area, which are part of the South-east division of Kolkata Police, cover four police districts in the area:

Rabindra Sarobar police station is a new police station being set up in the Rabindra Sarobar area.

Karaya Women police station, has jurisdiction over all police districts under the jurisdiction of the South-east division, i.e. Topsia, Beniapukur, Ballygunge, Gariahat, Lake, Karaya, Rabindra Sarobar and Tiljala.

Economy

Gariahat Market

Gariahat market, spread along Rashbehari Avenue, Gariahat Road and the lanes in the area, is one of the largest and busiest markets in Kolkata. The shops sell variety of saris, clothes, jewellery, electronic goods, furniture and what not. The makeshift shops along the footpaths, popular as hawkers, sell everything – crockery, cutlery, decorative items and utilities. It has numerous eateries and street food joints. Modern malls have also come up. Gariahat market is also well known for selling fish which is a staple for the Bengali community living in Calcutta.

Education

Ballygunge is home to some of the following educational institutions in Kolkata:

Army Public School, Kolkata, Ballygunge Maidan Camp

Kendriya Vidyalaya Ballygunge, Kolkata, Ballygunge Maidan Camp

National High School Hazra Road Campus, 42/1 Hazra Road, Kolkata - 700019

Ballygunge Government High School, Beltala

Basanti Devi College, 147B Rash Behari Avenue, Kolkata

Muralidhar Girls' College, P411, 14, Gariahat Rd, Golpark, Hindustan Park, Ballygunge, Kolkata, West Bengal 700029

Jagadbandhu Institution, 25, Fern Road, Kolkata.

Kamala Girls' High School, Lake Road (Kavi Bharati Sarani)

Patha Bhavan, Swinhoe Street, Ekdalia Road, Palm Avenue, Ballygunge Place and Merlin Park

South Point School, Mandeville Gardens and Ballygunge Place

St. Lawrence High School, Ballygunge Circular Road

Notable people

Jyoti Basu, politician

Buddhadeva Bose, writer

Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, politician

Debabrata Biswas, Rabindra Sangeet singer

Prosenjit Chatterjee, Bengali Film Actor

Sachin Dev Burman, singer

Sarat Chandra Chatterjee, novelist

Aroup Chatterjee, (born 1958) – British Indian atheist physician, author of Mother Teresa: The Untold Story

Somnath Chatterjee, politician

Jibanananda Das, poet

Barun De, historian

Supriya Devi, film actress, lived on Ballygunge Circular Road.

Swarnakumari Devi, poet, musician, and social worker

Aroti Dutt, social worker

Gurusaday Dutt, civil servant

Ghanshyam Das Birla, industrialist

Sunil Gangopadhyay, writer

Anup Ghoshal, singer

Jaimin Rajani, singer-songwriter

Buddhadeb Guha, novelist and poet

Indrajit Gupta, politician

Sheila Jasanoff

Satyendra Chandra Mitra, politician

Suchitra Mitra, singer

Hemanta Mukherjee, singer

Mani Shankar Mukherjee, writer

Pranab Mukherjee, politician

Subrata Mukherjee, former mayor of Kolkata

Subhas Mukhopadhyay, physician

Prof. Meghnad Saha, physicist

Nares Chandra Sen-Gupta, Bengali novelist and legal scholar

P. C. Sorcar, Jr., magician

Suchitra Sen, film actress lived on Ballygunge Circular Road.

Ruma Guha Thakurta, singer

Satyajit Ray, film-maker

Satyendranath Tagore, civil servant

Transport

Two famous bus routes of Ballygunge area operated by WBTC are:

S-10A (Ballygunge - Howrah Stn)

S-9A (Ballygunge - Dunlop)

Other WBTC Bus routes are:

AC-24 (Patuli - Howrah Stn)

AC-24A (Kamalgazi - Howrah Stn)

AC-47 (Kudghat - Shapoorji)

AC-4B (Joka - Newtown)

AC-49 (Parnasree - Ecospace)

C-8 (Joka - Barasat)

EB-3 (Tollygunge Tram Depot - Ecospace)

M-14 (Behala 14 no. Bus stand - New Town)

S-3W (Joka - Ecospace)

S-4 (Parnasree - Karunamoyee)

S-22 (Shakuntala Park - Karunamoyee)

S-46 (Rabindra Nagar - Karunamoyee)

V-1 (Tollygunge Tram Depot - Airport)

S-62 (Ramnagar - Patuli)

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ballygunge.

External links

Kolkata/South travel guide from Wikivoyage

Encyclopedic content adapted from the Wikipedia article on Ballygunge, used under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Explore on the ground

Map & local discovery

© OpenStreetMap contributorsOpen in Google Maps →
🍽️
Discover
Restaurants
Discover
Cafés
🍸
Discover
Bars & Clubs
🛍️
Discover
Shops
🖼️
Discover
Museums & Art
🛏️
Discover
Hotels
From Wikimedia Commons

Ballygunge in pictures

Ballygunge photo 1

Photos from the Wikipedia article on Ballygunge, available under the same CC BY-SA / public-domain terms as the source article.

More in Kolkata

Other great neighborhoods in Kolkata